A Story...

Today I heard a story that was meant to be related to corporate culture. I think it has another application, which I will get to. But first, a
story....

A family in the panhandle of Oklahoma was getting ready for church one spring morning. The mother and father had gotten all ready to go,
but they were having trouble rounding up their boys. It was a splendid spring morning, and after a harsh winter the boys were enjoying playing.
Thinking that it might not hurt to give them a little lead, the parents decided the boys would skip church and stay home with an uncle.

So the parents loaded up the carriage and headed off to the chapel, leaving the boys playing on the farm. After they had played for awhile, the
uncle came out on the front porch with a piece of chalk, and asked them "You wanna see a neat trick?" Being boys, they were all too happy and
eager. So the uncle drew a line on the porch and said, "Let me show you how to mesmerize a chicken." and sent the boys running to the coop to find
a hen.

When they returned, he grabbed the chicken from them, placed it on the ground where its feet straddled the line, and then with his hand he pushed
the chickens head down until it beak was touching the chalk line. Once in this position the chicken froze and stood like a statue with its beak stuck
to the white chalk line.

This amused the boys to no end, and each of them darted off to grab their own chickens, so they could do their own trick. In short order the boys
ran back and forth from the coop to the porch, placing chickens in the same silly position. Soon enough, they had emptied the hen house, and had
about 70 chickens standing motionless on their front porch.

Shortly, while the boys were laughing at their feat, they heard the horses hooves and squeaking wheels of their parents carriage, returning from
church. This fueled their excitement, just KNOWING that mom and dad would think that this was a total hoot. And, to be honest, mom and dad DID take
a small, perverse bit of humor from seeing the site. However, what the boys didn't know was that the pastor was coming home with mom and dad.

When the carriage stopped, dad jumped up and ran to the house cursing. Of course, the embarrassment of the pastor knowing that the boys weren't
sick would just literally kill him. So he began place kicking the chickens off the porch. Once removed from the line, they were able to animate
again, and they were running and clucking around the yard. Feather flying, dads foot swinging repeatedly....it surely was a site. However the pastor
was so insulted by the event he just turned his carriage around and went home without ever stopping.

While not an exact retelling, it gets the primary point, being that in an organization you can become so focused on the line that you become
completely unable to move. You become restricted by the "corporate" line (ie, company culture) that you forget what it means to actually work (ie
the reason behind the culture). You become so focused on facts that you are unable to remember why those facts mattered in the first place.

This is a good lesson for American's to learn. Our nation has become taken over by a the Military Industrial Complex. And the American people are
conditioned to believe that "War is good". And, like chickens, we put our beaks on that white line and do not move it.

In so doing, we completely forget what it was that made us American's in the first place. The ideals that were at the heart of what created our
country. Instead, we now just keep our beak down on the line of "Patriotism", never thinking exactly what that word means.

To be a Patriot in America, you cannot allow yourself to divorce abject freedom and liberty from the daily American experience. And by its very
nature our current mindset of war and acceptance of militarized police units in our cities attempts to effect this divorcing of our core ideals from
our daily experience.

This election cycle I urge each of you to take your beak up away from the line. Free yourself from a mindset and search out what it really means to
be American. Do not allow your mindset to be created by a news program. Instead, create it yourself. Go out and discover what it means to be an
American, not by following a culture. But rather by experiencing it yourself.

In school we are taught that not only did WWII end the Depression, but that it was also increased government spending. It is ignored that there were
things like regulations put into place, and other steps, that were the true fix.

So most Americans have an understanding (wrongly) that war creates revenue. Now, there are protests. But to what effect? The same people keep
getting elected to foment the same wars. What is really done with all the protesting.

Or, perhaps the protesters are the (noisy) minority? In which case the metaphor might still have some validity.

I am unsure. But you can use the metaphor for many other things, like buying in to the useless political dichotomy that we call a "political
system".

The point is, when you focus too hard, you tend to miss pertinent details and eventually begin buying into a wholly false and illogical logic.

Originally posted by Cygnis
So in your illustration the line is bad, and uncle sam is keeping our nose to the line.

Wouldn't that mean even by voting for other people in the "political" line, still be the same old line?

Is it Uncle Sam doing it? Or is Uncle Sam just benefitting from it? Could the line represent

- party politics?
- war and the industrial military?
- the idea of tax and spend?
- the idea that we are going to make people free, whether they like it or not?

There are many things that encompass the "American Culture" that are misguided. Take your pick.

But you are right....voting for either party is a vote for the same party. There is no difference. They take turns chiseling away at our liberty
from different sides. We have purposefully put in a bipolar political system, with massive and unhealthy swings in approach from season to season.
Even if they didn't collude to maintain their power, what good would this schizophrenic approach do us?

No, it seems cruel to place kick the chickens. But if it gives them freedom, perhaps it is more an act of mercy?

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors. The opinions of our members are not those of site ownership who maintains strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.